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Commercial Site Development: HELP NEEDED

 
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abc1111

posts: 88

Sep 23, 2008 11:12 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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I need to build a commercial website from an existing one that simply describe some of our services. We are of course fund limited, so we have to go after a cheap and
 
I am wondering what to use:
- guru.com
- Elance?
- Volusion?
- Other website development companies?
More specifically:
- Credit Card Transaction (google checkout?
- Description of Less than 10 services to sell.
- Check mark for legal document stating they agree to the statements.
- All data goes to a database: name, email, order #, etc.
 
How much should this be on a monthly basis due to the credit card service?
What companie to do recommend to develop it with?
I would like to insert this into our current website design. Can I simply copy/paste the xml code into my current design or do I need to buy their design + code?
 
Thank you.
knowonder

posts: 6

Sep 24, 2008 10:44 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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I`d suggest posting your website requirements on a site like www.rentacoder.com.  You`ll get bids from around the world for all sorts of prices.  

If you need to process credit cards, you have several solutions open to you from paypal to getting your own gateway processing account (e.g., authorize.net) and merchant account.

Sounds like you don`t have a huge requirement and that your not designing any technology so you should be able to get that done for little cost.

Good luck!
Dan


-------------------------

dan@updatelane.com
http://www.updatelane.com

Real estate listing and transaction management made simple.

abc1111

posts: 88

Sep 25, 2008 3:57 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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What`s the difference between paypal and a merchant account?
Videography

posts: 672

Sep 25, 2008 11:39 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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Merchant account: Lower transaction fees but at the cost of monthly fees regardless of volume and you are locked into a contract term.
PayPal: No monthly fees, no minimum, but higher transaction fees.

A few people report bad experiences with PayPal, but the complaints are usually amplified by those selling merchant account services.  I propose that there are as many merchant account nightmares, but because there are so many merchant account providers, the stories are spread out over the landscape.  If ten merchants have a problem with PayPal, then it`s a pinpoint focus on PayPal.  If ten merchants each have a problem with ten different merchant account providers, then no one observes a problem.

There is a third alternative: Amazon.  You can now let Amazon process your customers` credit card purchases. (http://www.amazonservices.com/payments/).  I haven`t used this service yet, but you can now offer both to let the buyer have a choice.

The bottom line, though is the bottom line.  If you have a large volume of credit card traffic on your site, then even with the monthly fees, the lower transaction fee may save you some money in the long term.

Your first step should be with your own bank.  If your credit is good you may be able to get the  merchant account directly through them.


-------------------------

Steve Mann
Internet Videographer
MannMade Digital Video
My Email


abc1111

posts: 88

Sep 27, 2008 10:21 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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What would be a "reasonable" price for my requirements posted above?
vwebworld

posts: 1237

Sep 27, 2008 10:41 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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Prices will vary. Some more information would be needed to get a reliable quote/estimate.
 
It seem like you want to sell something online. Knowing the type of product, how many products, and if the product has options (like colors or sizes, weights) that change the price will help determine if you need a comprehensive ecommerce program/script. Do you want to email your customers?
 
Is the database you refer to a new database (form the ecommerce program) or an existing database?
 
~Roland


-------------------------

Web Design | Best Beef Jerky | ecommerce articles | Follow vwebworld on Twitter
abc1111

posts: 88

Sep 27, 2008 10:57 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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Less than 10 services to sell. Simple.
No need to email the customer, just at the end of the transaction for confirmation.
The database is a new one.

abc1111

posts: 88

Sep 27, 2008 10:58 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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What website is most recommended for my project:
- Guru?
- Elance?
- Rentacoder?
- Other?

vwebworld

posts: 1237

Sep 28, 2008 8:52 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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If you want to get a quote for the work... most any of those sites will be ok. Just recognize that usually you will get very low ball quotes (and think "wow this is great"), but you may not know much about who is doing the work. So, I`d suggest getting references to check and samples of prior work especially for the task you need the person to preform.
 
Also, from what you`ve said.. there is no special programing that is needed so a free ecommerce solution like ZenCart will be fine.
 
You said "No need to email the customer, just at the end of the transaction for confirmation",  that is a must for any ecommerce transaction and if you use PayPal the customer gets a receipt from PayPal.
 
Most ecommerce solutions will include a database for your customer information and product information. Maybe that`s more than you need, but having the ability to contact your customer list can be a valuable marking, customer service, and post-sale feature. An ecommerce solution like ZenCart also, makes maintaining products, pricing, specials, etc... easy without having to know HTML or PHP.
 
~Roland
 
 
vwebworld9/28/2008 8:59 AM


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Web Design | Best Beef Jerky | ecommerce articles | Follow vwebworld on Twitter
knowonder

posts: 6

Sep 28, 2008 10:52 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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The further you define your business requirements the tighter you can expect your development quotes.  This is one of the more time consuming and necessary steps that a lot of people skip.  But, if you actually do it, you will be able to minimize the development surprises, get a better estimate on time to develop, get a tighter range on cost.  You will also be able to start filtering those that are bidding on your project if you think they`re listening to your requirements, are putting in the time on development quotes that reflect the time you put in on thinking through your requirements, and if they bring anything value-added to the table that you weren`t able to think about.  

The stuff you`re mentioning has all been done before so the code should be readily available.  But, if you haven`t done so yet, you need to detail, to the best of your ability, exactly what you`re looking for - what the site is supposed to do, every page, every link, will you need advertising space, if so what size ads.  You have a product, will you need to store product information, click for a larger image or for more detailed info, if you`re shipping, define your shipping methods and costs, etc.  Try to answer all the questions that you`re asking your developer to answer.  Draw up a sample screen shot of what you`re envisioning and find websites out there that emmulate what you`re trying to accomplish.  Your job is to paint as accurate a picture for whomever you choose to develop it.  If you do this - or have already done this, it really doesn`t matter which site you go to find your developer because you`ll be able to better decipher their quotes.  

When you get all these quotes, first separate them on who sounds competent to you.  Then, start looking at their price.  And as vwebworld said, make sure you look at their referrals and past work.





-------------------------

dan@updatelane.com
http://www.updatelane.com

Real estate listing and transaction management made simple.

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